TechBits

The iPhone 4S has a little-heralded feature that makes it unique among phones, at least for a while: It can talk to a new class of wireless devices, such as watches and heart-rate monitors.

The phone, which went on sale Oct. 14, is the first to have a new type of Bluetooth chip that can connect using very little power. The chip uses so little power that it can go into devices that are powered only by a standard “button cell” battery common in watches. The battery can last for years.

Bluetooth Special Interest Group, the industry group behind Bluetooth, on Monday said these small devices will be labeled “Bluetooth Smart.” More fully featured devices such as the iPhone that can communicate with them and with other, standard Bluetooth devices will be labeled “Bluetooth Smart Ready.”

Casio of Japan has said it will introduce a watch in late December that’s Bluetooth Smart. It will be able to link to a smartphone and alert the wearer to incoming emails and text messages by beeping and vibrating.

Sony Ericsson had a watch five years ago that used regular Bluetooth to do the same things the Casio watch will be able to do. But the Sony Ericsson watch weighed nearly half a pound because of its big, rechargeable battery, and it lasted only three weeks on a charge.

Nordic Semiconductor, a Norwegian company, has said that one of its Bluetooth Smart chips will go into a belt that measures its wearer’s heart rate and relays it to a smartphone.

Other possible Bluetooth Smart devices include glucose sensors for diabetics and home-automation sensors that could, for instance, tell a phone if all the windows in the home are closed, said Suke Jawanda, chief marketing officer of the Bluetooth Special Interest Group.

Besides the iPhone, the soon-to-be-released Razr from Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. will also be Bluetooth Smart Ready, Jawanda said. It’s a touchscreen smartphone that doesn’t have much in common with the old clamshell Razrs.

A few laptops already are already Bluetooth Smart Ready.

Bluetooth Smart was developed by Nokia Corp., which called it “Wibree.” It yielded the technology to the Bluetooth SIG in 2007 to spread its adoption.

NEW YORK

AT&T Inc.’s U-Verse TV service is going wireless — inside the home. Its new set-top boxes will use the home’s Wi-Fi to get their TV programming, with no need for a coaxial cable.

That means TV sets can be moved from room to room and still work.

“You could move your U-Verse to the patio for the football game if the weather’s nice or to the guest room if you have guests coming in,” said David Christopher, chief marketing officer.

That’s not really why AT&T developed it, though. The company was looking for a way to cut installation time and cost, Christopher said. With wireless boxes, installers won’t need to run cable or drill through walls.

U-Verse is delivered with Internet technology rather than standard cable technology. That makes it easier for AT&T to send the signal wirelessly. Other, smaller phone companies have used wireless set-top boxes for a few years.

The service uses standard Wi-Fi and has about the same range. The boxes will be available starting next week for a one-time fee of $49, plus the standard monthly $7 box rental fee. They’re made by Cisco Systems Inc.

A Wi-Fi hotspot can serve up to two set-top boxes wirelessly. A home can have two more set-top boxes, but they would have to be wired up, since the hotspot has limited capacity. All four could show high-definition programming simultaneously.

AT&T Inc. sells U-Verse in areas where it’s the local-phone company. It has 3.6 million TV subscribers, making it the eighth-largest pay-TV provider in the U.S.